An unarmed Granbury man was pleading for his life before he was fatally shot by an Arizona officer, according to witness accounts in a newly released police report.

A woman who was present during the January shooting and a transcription of the officer's body-cam footage describe 26-year-old Daniel Shaver as crying and saying "Please don't shoot" shortly before Officer Philip "Mitch" Brailsford fired five shots from his AR-15 rifle.

Philip "Mitch" Brailsford (Maricopa County Sheriff's Office)

Brailsford has since been charged with second-degree murder and fired from the Mesa Police Department.

A Maricopa County judge on Tuesday barred the release of the body-camera footage, which both prosecutors and defense attorneys said needed to be sealed to protect the trial's integrity.

But the supplemental incident report released this week includes a transcription of the footage, as well as a witness's account and 911 calls.

Officers were called to the La Quinta Inn & Suites in Mesa on Jan. 18 after receiving reports of a man pointing a rifle out a hotel window.

Shaver and a woman identified as Monique Portillo were ordered to exit the hotel room. Shaver was told to get on the ground and Portillo was told to go to the officers, who handcuffed her.

Daniel Shaver.

Portillo told authorities that they had been drinking and that Shaver could've been intoxicated. She also said that Shaver had showed her and a male colleague a pellet gun in his room earlier.

According to a description of the body-cam footage, Shaver was "compliant and offered no resistance." As an officer identified as Sgt. Langley asked Shaver questions, he responded with "yes, sir" and "no, sir."

At one point Shaver moved and Langley shouted at him, "If you do that again, we are shooting you."

"Please don't shoot me," Shaver says. According to the transcription, he was sobbing.

Shaver was then ordered to crawl toward the officers. His hand appeared to move to his waist at one point and officers started to say "Don't" before Brailsford fired five shots.

The description of the body-cam video says Shaver's movement was "consistent with attempting to pull his shorts up as they were falling off" but also "a very similar motion to someone drawing a pistol from their waist band."

Shaver was declared dead at the scene. His autopsy report has not been publicly released.

Shaver was unarmed. Police recovered two pellet guns from the hotel room, which they determined were related to his pest-control job.

Craig Mehrens, a lawyer for Brailsford, has previously said that Brailsford thinks "he acted appropriately and within the guidelines of what he was taught."

Shaver's wife, Laney Sweet, has filed a $35 million notice of claim — a precursor to a lawsuit — against the Mesa police, citing excessive force and wrongful death.